>>2762819I agree. A convoluted premise can be good for 20 minutes but you can't do anything with it after that. How much mileage can you get out of "it's a magical world of nudity!" Ok, so everyone is naked, the first time you meet the characters they're all naked, and that's it. Personally I like to get to know the characters first. Give me a reason to care about them. Then when I know them, put them in a situation where something alluring happens. Suddenly they're in a situation where they're naked together and the smaller girl gets breast envy. Boom, now you have that emotional connection between the audience and the characters. You can buy into it. It becomes plausible then. From there let the characters engage with the situation and push the envelope. I love the idea of taking a character I've known for several episodes, maybe even a season, with zero sexual content and then suddenly they're in a situation where they're naked or vulnerable or embarrassed or dominant or any kind of instance where you're invited as a viewer into a more intimate situation with them then you had previously known. I'll get more aroused if a girl doesn't appear naked for a dozen episodes and then suddenly she's in an ENF situation than if it's just an ENF premise and page 1 is a girl I've never met running around naked. Who is this girl and why should I care? There's a reason why people love rule 34. You want to see girls you "know" naked.